| Literature DB >> 31174334 |
Yuki Masumizu1,2, Binghui Zhou3,4, A K M Humayun Kober5,6,7, Md Aminul Islam8,9,10, Hikaru Iida11,12, Wakako Ikeda-Ohtsubo13,14, Yoshihito Suda15, Leonardo Albarracin16,17,18, Tomonori Nochi19,20, Hisashi Aso6,21, Keiichi Suzuki22, Julio Villena23,24, Haruki Kitazawa25,26.
Abstract
Emerging threats of antimicrobial resistance necessitate the exploration of effective alternatives for healthy livestock growth strategies. 'Immunosynbiotics', a combination of immunoregulatory probiotics and prebiotics with synergistic effects when used together in feed, would be one of the most promising candidates. Lactobacilli are normal residents of the gastrointestinal tract of pigs, and many of them are able to exert beneficial immunoregulatory properties. On the other hand, wakame (Undaria pinnafida), an edible seaweed, has the potential to be used as an immunoregulatory prebiotic when added to livestock feed. Therefore, in order to develop a novel immunosynbiotic, we isolated and characterized immunoregulatory lactobacilli with the ability to utilize wakame. Following a month-long in vivo wakame feeding trial in 8-week-old Landrace pigs (n = 6), sections of intestinal mucous membrane were processed for bacteriological culture and followed by identification of pure colonies by 16S rRNA sequence. Each isolate was characterized in vitro in terms of their ability to assimilate to the wakame and to differentially modulate the expression of interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interferon beta (IFN-β) in the porcine intestinal epithelial (PIE) cells triggered by Toll-like receptor (TLR)-4 and TLR-3 activation, respectively. We demonstrated that feeding wakame to pigs significantly increased the lactobacilli population in the small intestine. We established a wakame-component adjusted culture media that allowed the isolation and characterization of a total of 128 Lactobacilli salivarius colonies from the gut of wakame-fed pigs. Interestingly, several L. salivarius isolates showed both high wakame assimilation ability and immunomodulatory capacities. Among the wakame assimilating isolates, L. salivarius FFIG71 showed a significantly higher capacity to upregulate the IL-6 expression, and L. salivarius FFIG131 showed significantly higher capacity to upregulate the IFN-β expression; these could be used as immunobiotic strains in combination with wakame for the development of novel immunologically active feeds for pigs.Entities:
Keywords: Lactobacillus salivarius; gut microbiota; immunity; pigs; wakame
Year: 2019 PMID: 31174334 PMCID: PMC6617407 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms7060167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Figure 1Effect of wakame feeding on body weight gain and gut microbiota of pigs. (A) Body weight of pigs at the beginning (9 weeks-old pigs) and the end (13 weeks-old pigs) of dietary intervention. (B) Proportion of Lactobacillus salivarius population in the porcine gut microbiota estimated by terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) method followed by sequence (573 bp) alignment using MAFFT tool. Asterisks (**) indicate statistical differences between wakame-fed and control groups with a significant level of p < 0.01.
Figure 2Evaluation of newly developed wakame medium by estimating the optical density (OD) of broth following the culture of Lactobacillus plantarum MPL16. The OD of wakame-broth used was measured progressively at every half an hour incubation at 37 °C for 24 h.
Figure 3Change of pH and viable bacterial counts of Lactobacillus salivarius wakame assimilating isolates in the newly developed wakame-component adjusted media. Lactobacillus salivarius FFIG71 is the strongest wakame-utilizing and anti-inflammatory isolate (based on OD and IL-6 expression values presented in Table S3). Lactobacillus salivarius FFIG131 is the strongest wakame utilizing and antiviral isolate (based on OD and IFN-β expression values presented in Table S3). Both isolates were cultured in newly developed wakame broth for 24 h and pH of the medium and viable bacterial count was estimated to evaluate the bacterial growth on the medium.
Figure 4Immunoregulatory properties of Lactobacillus salivarius isolates. Porcine Intestinal Epithelial (PIE) cells were pre-stimulated with each isolate for 48 h followed by Enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) challenge for 12 h, and then quantification of IL-6 mRNA expression by qRT-PCR was done. The Y-axis represents the relative index of IL-6 expression, and X-axis represents the individual isolates of L. salivarius indicated by the chronological numbers (FFIG9-FFIG136). MPL16 and TL2937, two known Lactobacillus strains, were used as positive controls. Results displayed in the bar graphs represent the mean ± SD of three independent experiments performed in triplicates. Statistical differences between ETEC-challenged control PIE cells and bacterial prestimulated PIE cells followed by ETEC challenge are indicated with asterisks (*) p < 0.05 and (**) p < 0.01.
Figure 5Immunoregulatory properties of Lactobacillus salivarius isolates. PIE cells were pre-stimulated with each isolate for 48 h followed by Poly(I:C) challenge for 12 h, and quantification of IFN-β mRNA expression by qRT-PCR was done. The Y-axis represent the relative index of IFN-β expression, and X-axis represent the individual isolates of L. salivarius indicated by chronological number (FFIG9-FFIG136). MPL16 and TL2937, two known Lactobacillus strains, were used as positive controls. Results displayed in the bar graphs represent the mean ± SD of three independent experiments performed in triplicates. Statistical differences between ETEC-challenged control PIE cells and bacterial prestimulated PIE cells followed by ETEC challenge are indicated with asterisks (*) p < 0.05 and (**) p < 0.01.
Categorization of the isolates based on wakame assimilation (OD) and immunomodulatory (Relative index of IL-6 and IFN-β expression) properties.
| Phenotype | Group | Ranges of OD and RI Estimates * | Combined Properties |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL-6 | g1 | OD ≥ 0.1; RI ≥ 1 | Isolates able to utilize wakame and strongly induce anti-inflammation |
| g2 | OD ≥ 0.1; RI < 1 | Isolates able to utilize wakame and induce anti-inflammation | |
| g3 | OD < 0.1; RI ≥ 1 | Isolates cannot utilize wakame but strongly induce anti-inflammation | |
| g4 | OD < 0.1; RI < 1 | Isolates cannot utilize wakame but induce anti-inflammation | |
| IFN-β | g1 | OD > 0.1; 10 ≥ RI ≥ 2 | Isolates able to utilize wakame and induce IFN-β expression |
| g2 | OD > 0.1; RI ≥ 10 | Isolates able to utilize wakame and induce strong IFN-β expression | |
| g3 | OD > 0.1; RI ≤ 1 | Isolates able to utilize wakame and induce anti-inflammation | |
| g4 | OD ≤ 0.1; RI ≥ 2 | Isolates cannot utilize wakame but induce IFN-β expression | |
| g5 | OD ≤ 0.1; RI ≤ 1 | Isolates cannot utilize wakame but induce anti-inflammation |
* OD, Optical Density; RI, Relative Index.
Figure 6Discriminant analysis of wakame assimilation and immunoregulatory activity of isolates. (A) Relationship between IL-6 expression modulation and wakame assimilation (OD) of Lactobacillus salivarius isolates. (B) Discrimination of conveniently categorized groups of bacterial isolates estimated by discriminant function analysis based on IL-6 expression and wakame assimilation.
Figure 7Discriminant analysis of wakame assimilation and immunoregulatory activity of isolates. (A) Relationship between IFN-β expression modulation and wakame assimilation (OD) of Lactobacillus salivarius isolates. (B) Discrimination of conveniently categorized groups of bacterial isolates estimated by discriminant function analysis based on IFN-β expression and wakame assimilation.